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Show -, ' . X 7' --.lib it The Weather ' UTAH Partly cloudy Sunday; little change La temperature. Max. temperature, Friday. . . .95 Mia. temperature, Friday ....iZ Max, temperature, Saturday; .9' MJn. temperature, Saturday. . .53 It you do not receive your llzrll promptly, call Tho Herald cfriy, 403, before 7 p: m. week days, ej- i be delivered to you. y VOE.17, NO. 9 COMPLETES UNITED PRESS w-TEIifiORAPR w-TEIifiORAPR NEWS SERVICH ."" PROVO, UTAH COUNTY, :XUTAH, SUNDAY, AUGUST 27, 1939 UTAH'S ONLT DAILT SOUTH OP SALT LAK13 PRICE FIVE CENTS Proclaimed Utah County's Healthiest Girls S. L. It - ' ; V - " i&nmomct win ce iKmeci: fy llL III. ILI-v-'tfti K i . i I 1 1 i ill y. . - l GUILD . CASE ' ' ' ' V t r y- vy 4 - riETSDEATII .UNDER TRUCK Fatal Accident S e n d s Traffic Deaths In v Utah To 92 SALT LAKE CITY, Aug. 2G.(U.R) TJtah's traffic toll shot - to' 92 today following the death of 6-year-old Naosnrr" -i1'per4oi bait liKe uiiy, wno - was sirucK.tuiu iui uvci uy u truck Friday. " '': he child's death marked the iilh motor vehicle accident ' fatality in SaltLake City this "..yean '" ; r - ' . As l she ran across the street In: front- of 218 Ea3t Seventeenth South street, enroute to her home fter a trip to a nearby store, the Pyper girl was struck at 4:15 p. m. She was hit by a' truck driven by WJL Warren, 49, of.N9rth Og-denT who told officers he;1 was following' another car. at -about15 miles an hour and did not seethe girl tmtll-the moment of Impact. Witnesses agreed Mr. Warren could not have avoided hitting1 the C'l Eft"', who darted irt front of the truck. V SPANISH FORK Donna "Cnap-ple, "Cnap-ple, S.' daughter, of. Mr. and Mrs. itoach cmappie ofr Spanish Fork, l-A'-. suffered fractured right femur, ' A v multiple lacerations . and bruises - about her back and head, and painful pain-ful friction burns over, her body when she was struck by an automobile auto-mobile driven by Elaine Johnson, 21, Friday evening. . , - - . TV The accident occurred at the : Intersection of. Third North and Main street as the litUe girl stepped step-ped directly Into the path of the car as!; she entered a pedestrian lane; W, ' i-jXy "' ' City Marshal Cooper Jex Deputy Depu-ty Ed. Clark and Policeman Leon-ard Leon-ard Chatwin, who v investigated, termed the accident unavoidable under the circumstances. . . Another accident, at Sixth 'East and First South occurred Friday evening when cars driven by Ken- k neth Tayio'r 16. and Vera Keele, V 21, collided. " Both cars were badly damaged. . but the occupants escaped es-caped with, minor bruises and .hock.X-"' - -.- -r -MERRY ;-; OOUND A DailjLPiclure of Hvhat'a U Going On In National VV.V.V .Affairs- y" By -DREW TEAHSON afl ROnmT S. AIXEN .-Poland in Jam Now Because .She Played Double'- Cross tA Game With Hitler; Peace I'act witn Keicn ueit France in Lurch As, Nazis f Took Rhineland; Deserted -Allies At Munich ln Keturn For Morsels of Czech Terri-, "tory -,- - Xr:'K iVxv -. y v I . , -;, : , (EDITOR'S NOTE: The 3ferry-Go-Round grimly f oss- " a . brass "ring to the diplo-niats diplo-niats of Europe, who have gjn the world its roughest and costliest ride In many, a decade). : . T WASHINGTON -- As -you look 'back through the vista 'of Europe's precarious peace,' the; road Is lit-tered lit-tered with broken pacts and the debris of diplomatic double-cross- ing '. t desperate plight if she had not engaged lit the-game of double-. double-. cros3. And the British would not now stand humiliated before: trie world if they had notsoiled their r r fingers Ln the same game, """"-y.v " " The game began in dead earnest V shortly .after Hitler, trie master player of them all. took over the reins in . Germany. ' One of his " first moves 'was to negotiate - a non-aggression pact with Poland. ' For ten years there was. to beVio , war between them. Poland and A "her once-bitter , enemy,, Germany, ' were to be bosom friends. This was a complete1 reversal .for Poland. Chief sore-spots on hed body politic long 'had been Up-r Up-r pr Silesia, the Corridor, and the Free j City of Danzig torn from Germany at Versailles." To protect herself- Poland : early had nego-tiated nego-tiated an alliance with .France, natural enemy of Germany. France had trained the Polish army, lent money for munitions, steered Polish Pol-ish foreign policy, y y -, ' -But in 1934 French-influence r "vanished overnight. v The alliance (Continued on Page-?:, Sec. 2) yviiiiici .v xJ xvcufjcii r v After a temporary ' shutdown, x the ; Pleasant Grove . .Canning company at Provo will continue ' operations Monday, - officials'-of . the company announce.- r V r u : Charming. ye3,, and also -healthy. Theyoung ladies pictured above county. 4-H club-girls' health' contest. Udene Garrett; left, is the of Mr. and Mrs. : "E. B. Garrett of Xehi. Florence Bone', right, won , -- . .. i N X - v- . .j- ..... ..... . . daughter of Mr. Jand Mrs. John Ulali L. D. S; Stake Combines : . Conference Willi Convention ; . 0CM I. A.;. Relief. Society y Utah .take quarterlyconf erence", together rwith Relief Society and M. I. A conventionswhich opened Saturday, will continue here today. '' X-'Xy- f: 7XXyA ll- In order that all church membersmay attend, there will . T - One man , was charged with drunken , driving and four , companions com-panions ' with being i Intoxicated following, a Aone-car accident on the canyon roadT between Orem and the. mouth of . ProVo canyon Friday night. , t -" ".' ; - x Leo 'AVilkerson,x2i, of . Ameri-i can Fprk drivery of the car which ran off they road and" struck several objects before coming , to a Stop, pleaded hot - guilty in city court Saturday to drunken driving i charges. ' His trial', was set for Septemberj 12 at 10 a.m.. and vhis - bond placed at $100. John . Wilkerson, 55,- of American Ameri-can :Forktwho suf fered acut under hi3; ear, was ' the only occupant oc-cupant injured, according to Sheriff Jc8irr S. Evans,, who investigated. in-vestigated. Hef pleaded guilty Saturday to being i.mtoxjcated and w;as . "given', a five-day jail sen7 tence, suspended; on gooir; behavior be-havior , for 90 days. - ' ,y . - Verl Wilkerson, 24, and LaVar Wilkerson, 35, both of American Fork.' " and Don Andenburg; 24, of Heber, each pleaded hot guilty to being Intoxicated. Their trials were set for September 13, SepT tember 14 and ; September 14, re spectively.; y j . ; '. '.-:.'. is: v-'. IJCENSED TO MArtUY '..Max B.s Gardner, 19. Spanish Fork, and Vivian5 I. Anderson, 19, Spanish Fork. ! 1 .i v Herbert Ream, 20, Provo, land Ahna Pinegar, 17, Spanish Fork. y-Joseph . Jensen,- 22, Fairyeyy. and vera Ann Go,!. ISTSpaltr Fork. a. . J I V DIED.' . x MrsJ Catherine Smith Bassett, 78, mother of Mrs. T. Earl Par-doe, Par-doe, Friday at the Pardoe home of causes, incident to age. , DRUHIirlG nunnnr rn rn Hi Day J, " i ' Bone of Pleasant, Viewy. ; " " v vi' ue no sunaayy services- m ine -N - m - - - a. 7 waras, excepi in uie junior oun- day school, announces Leon New- ren of the stake presidency, ; Session Air 10 A. M. , , :;y yGeneral sessions to which every one', is invited will convene in the Stake tabernacle at 10 va. m; and 2 p. "m., besides the' evening session ses-sion at 7:30, at which an M. i:,A; program-' wiu oe preseniea. x; y r The sta.ke. presidency will be In charge of the general sessions. Dr. Carl -Eyring, recently, released re-leased as president of the Eastern-Central Eastern-Central States mission,, will speak at the morning meeting. Speakers will ' include also . missionaries of the stake who-have-returned since the last quarterly conference, according ac-cording to President .R. J. .Mtrr- dock. x -: . . - The 2 p. m. session, devoted to R-lief Society, will feature talks and reports ' from ' Mrs. Edith Y; Booth, . Relief., Society "president; MrsOrval Watts, President-Mur-dock and the visiting- general board, members. All visiting teachers teach-ers are especially urged to be in attendance at ; the- Session. A standing roll call will be taken of Relief Society members from the five wards. "V ; Featuring Sunday night's pro i;:-.iw)nunuea on fage JUgmj T?nr rti(r cci nn X President Dies SALT, LAKE CITY, Aug.' 26' (ILEM-Daniel J. Lang, 67, former president of the L. D.S. French mission, died in 'a Salt Lake hospital hos-pital last night following an operation. oper-ation. V - V ' ' '.'"-'v 7-t .;';-'.-.yy-. Lang was associated with the 2ion Cooperative Mercantile: Instl tute here for nearly fifty years. He was president of. the - high priests', quorum of the 18th L. D. S. ward at the time of his deatlu V -President Heber J. . Grant will be among the speakers at funeral services to.be held Sunday at 2 p. new -.23" - Thp derm an Homhn The German Hamburg-American line today, cancelled the sailing of its'- liner St.' Louis as 600 passengers . waited , at the pier. The St. Louis had been scheduled to sail v for Bermuda, a British possession. . No explanation for the cancellation was given. V, are winners in the annual Utah junior winner. She - is a' daughter in the ".senior division. She -Is a .. ... .,...,'.... i. . - Oi!E DEAD, FIVE HURT IN WRECK . BOISE, IdaT7AUg. .26 (U.TA One j person ywas ..dead and five injured, three critically; as-a result re-sult V, of i a ' head-on - collision between be-tween two automobiles ' traveimg at high speed on the Mountain Home highway, 28 Smiles' east vof Boise .today. ,. ' . - Mrs; A. A. Green, 60, Chicago, HI., x died -of her injuries-, soon after the wreck. ;,., ' Injured critically v.:were :. -Urban Piatt, 30, Ellen Bywater, 29, and Joan iiPlatt, 62, all of. Salt Lake City, ytah.t " y - Xy; - -X- - Injured .painfully, but ' not seriously seri-ously were : Sue F. Redhouse,. 4d Chicago arid .1 Mildred . Piatt, 14, Salt Lake City. - .T .. ;:-The... Piatt car, traveling toward to-ward MoUntain ' Home,' went out of control and . - headed . for - a ditch; VPlatt "attempted; - to- right it and returned 'to -the highway only to ' crash ; head-on " into . the car occupied by ,Mrs. Green and Miss ' Redhouse, , highway . patrol headquarters reported. . -y rrog ram yj&eaay .ror Hospital : Open ing K vi Prbgrarnf or the public exercices to. mark the opening of the-newly' constructed Utah Valley hospital, SundaySep-tember SundaySep-tember lO. was announced Saturday, by R.: J. Murdock; vice presiaent oi ine executive Doara oil me nospuai uu ciiau- mark oftne committee directing(S the opening of, the institution. , It; is planned, that the public meeting will be held in the Provo tabernacle, beginning- at 2- p. m. This meeting is to be followed by theof ficial dedication of the nos-pital nos-pital building at Itssite, and gen eral inspectionby the public. President Grant Invited . President Heber J. Grant of the L-JDL: S.. church has been invited to address .the tabernacle meeting, but it is not yet known whether he will be able jto be present, Mr. Murdock said, y VThe' address of -welcome will be delivered by Mayor Mark . Ander-tson Ander-tson of Provoy A historical and. financial fin-ancial report of the hospital will be .". presented by Clayton Jenkins, secretary-treasurer of the executive execu-tive board, y':y y; xL;y- yy-vv :- Dr. M. H. Manson of New. York will give an address repfesenting the. Commonwealth fund, through the endowment fromT which - the erection of . the new community hospital has been made possible. A pledge" of service from -the hospital hos-pital medical staff will be pre- X Continued on Page Three) mmrm y. d. uuuiii Judge Johnson , Grants J , K iv e Days iFor ; '.' Briefs, Reply ; y ; -SALT- LAKE CIT Aug, 2G(U.R)-Contestants, in the UtaTi-Power and Light company; com-pany; : suit -'against Prbvo, Utah,. v city - cpmmissiohers recessed today with Federal Judge: - Till nan " D." Johnson giving each of the contestants five days in which to file briefs. I The power " company was given until - August" 31" to fUe its brief andthe city was granted until September 6 to submits the reply nection with the Power Compan's suit to prevent -the city of Provo from 'expending $850,000 irt reve'-i nue bonds which were Issued for the erection of a municipal power plant." . ; . i , Provo commissioners, represent ed ; by City Attorney I,. E. Brock- bank,, were asked to show i cause why an injunction should not be issued', enjoining- them from construction con-struction of ; the Provo: ; power plant." . Judge Johnson did ' not. make ,at decision 1 on this point, pendingythe filing of briefs, by both tsides. ;.'.' "' Counsel for the Power Company asked to have the city restrained f ronv further ' construction work pending the filing of briefs; Judge Johnson said he could not grant" this plea. He pointed out, however", how-ever", that should the final decision decis-ion be adverse to the city, the city officials were . endangering them-seleves them-seleves with personal liability suits by continuing the work.. ' ' . ' Assisting. ,15x. Brockbank , was Stuard P. Dobbs of Ogden, representing, repre-senting, ,. the Ulen Contracting company George R. ' CoreyT and Shirley Jones represented the power company. , y Y- -y --x , A ' ' Qixeen For: ration rx;'- yy s-. Y P AYSON From - thirteen x of :Ty- ---- M. V Celeb Payson's lovely girls, selected, as. candidates - Dy- -memDers . oi uve celebration committee, three hae been selected to reignas queens at I Payson's twelfth annual Golden Gold-en 1 Onion Days and Homecoming celebration - on September2-3-4 y 'Miss Miriam Bates, daughter of Mryiand Mrs. . Ly A Bates won the coveted honor At being the Onion queen;securing first place in the contest. Miss Billie Busier, daughter xof Mr. and Mrs. CyTu Sterling, was ' second winner nd Will be "Miss Paysori." The -third place and honor of being "Harvest Queen" was won hy Miss Elizabeth Eliza-beth : Manwill, daughter . of Mrs. Elizabeth K. IZanwili; ! y The candidates. appeared s In formal gowns at a Tevue in the Star theater Friday ' night. Out of town judges were present to make the , selection : from the thirteen (Continued on, PageThree) v ART GALLERY :-4Xl OPEfJS TODAY y - ',y- 4x . - Provo's community art gaUery, a branch of the federal art project, proj-ect, will be opened to the public today at 2:30 py m., announces Del Mar Nelson, director. : he exhibit, housed in. a . spacious spaci-ous room of the new public library,: li-brary,: AVill be free,' and will remain re-main opejvxuntil 6:30 p. m. ; xThe workof Prof. B. F." Larson, Lar-son, head of the Brigham Young university art "department, will be featured ln the, opening . exhibit ex-hibit There will be 20 paintings, 17 oils and 12 ! , watercoldrs, ; 'Throughout the coming , months the work of local artists as well as nationally, ; famous t pictures, part of the traveling exhibit of the government, will be display-e3. - 7 til y LONDON. Amr. 26 balance, held an emergency, meeting tonight and drafted a reply to Adolf Hitler, Hit-ler, which reliable sources said wpuld be a rpfusal to -accept His suggestions for settling Germany V demands onPoland, -y. V yv.-;'-;''';1 The reply will be flown to Berlin' tompriw bjr Sir Ncwile Heiulei-san; British Brit-ish ambassador to Germany 'who : flAvc here this morning and , transmiitel Hitler's suggestions" to the cabinejand the Jcing. , V Shows No KetreatVX ;. r V- '"'' ' ' . ' ' .The "suggestions," according to itish'' n. treat from Hitler's -previous delhands Ai:,possession- of Danzigi the Poli.h . .. '. ' .' : .in ; y,, y... ,., r ... tfcorrldor and rprLaln other faction: War Situation inyBHef From World'sapitalsc ft BY UNITED PRESS LONDON British " ambassador posals from Hitler peace hope gleams faintly whuV hundreds of. Germans ruslyhdme. " ; - , ' ' ' . ' x BERLIN Tens of ; thousands more reservists called to colors andi railroads choked wlthXhem; Hitler's- message -to ABrltishylrst called5 "peace'! proposals7 then x just' proposals.. ' , Xt , - 7 ". . ' ROME Mussoliriiy receives two- messages from Hitler and he replies to one ; Italiaripress sees fsmair opening of light "Germans inFrance advised to return home btf German embassy So' X WASHIN'GTONRoosevelt puts war5 and peace uptovJUtler; having received Polish president's pledge to negotiate,yhe asksxlllt-ler asksxlllt-ler again for his, pledge. . lN' ' ' . ! . CRISTOBAL; C..ZSixyBrltish cruisers off Atlantic terminus mercial ships if war starts. , WARS AW First German. " soldier , killed onPolish soil T PARIS Italiansyclose French frontier; French have thousands of soldiers-guarding their , side. X - ' ' MOSCOW-British and French military missions leave for home. , -yV '. , y home ports begins.. . " . . QUEBEC Canadian authorities seize 'German snipe Kbenlgsberg and hold master, on theft charge; he tried to leave without unloading unload-ing :-a" Canadian's cargo ; soldiers appear, ph interpational boundary near sauit St. Marie. . TOKYO--Cabinet reshufflest war minister, slated to resigsr; 1 ' -X- 1 ' v ' THE HAGUE, Netherla-The German mlhisterassured Queen Wilhelmina that . in the eeht of - .war, Germany will respect Dutch neutralityf . -: - v' ; f . ,. . ' ' ' . x ' IIENDAYE. v Frencfe-Snanlfehiy Frontier Ten ' Americans. whn crossed the border enroute hpme vr prisoners, reportea ijaey saw armea xiauan soiaiers on auty. at y;iroad stations on ;their; journey from Burgos. ; yfx - t x ; v ERUSSELS One German Ambassador. v Dr.? -V o n Schwante, reaffirmed to KingLeopold the pledge that Germany will tirt no way violate 'Belgium, provided Belgium remains strictly neutral neu-tral in event l war. ,- hBERLIN Hermann Wllhelm xGoering, air: minister, issued a decreex rigidly, restricting air- flightsVover Germany. v N-f - . HONG ' KONG British authoritlesMmposed . wartime-like censor ship or au types or outgoing communications. v'y 5 - Hitlers Ta France and Great Britain .By JOE ALEX MORRIS United Preiss.Forelirn Editor - ,-VNx Britain and France .took anwggresion by. Germany; against Poland. 1 ! Vx i 7 '. -The two "democratic" powers were cold toward new proposalsbv Adolf Hitler. for a. "peaceful'.' settlement "oMhe ! r-' r Odlsnute bv direct , neffotiationx be 2ooscicH Sends 2nd Elltlor Jote V WASHINGTOX . : .; vy Atl. Hfl TTTM President Roosevelt put;' vwar or ' peace eqiiarely up to : "Adolf Hitler today by asking j him ; to follow Poland's example and agree to compose German-Polish ' differences differ-ences peaceably.- '.' '-. xne presiaent - cabled hia new appeal to Hitler lastnight,' his secona witnm hours. NHe jnformed hlrhxthat President Ignay Moscickix of Poland had agTee(Jxto settle - the -Nttntroversy by direct negotiation or. conciliation. concil-iation. : InxUrgent terms, he asked Hitler to accept too.-- "The , ; Polish;, government ' X is willing to agree to solve the controversy, which ;x has arisen between be-tween the RepubUc: of .Poland and the .German Reich ; by direct' ne gotiation or! through theVprocess of.- conciliation,'.' , Mr. Roosevelt cabled HlUer. ' ' .X - '.'Countless human lives can- yet be , saved. : AU the V world prays that,. Germany, too,v will accept.", ac-cept.", X v .. y . The president .dispatched his 'new appeal immediately ' upon : receipt of a message from Moacicki aci cepting the terms -of a: propasai which was . sent simultaneously, to him and to Hitler by Mr,' Roosevelt Thursday night, ; ; . ' . . ' ' New WPA Wage , Schedule Ready SALT- LAKE CITY, ' Aug. 26 0IR A 'new wage schedule for WPA workers will go into effect Sept. 1, increasing the '' monthly payroll in Utah by $68,000, . Glen D. Reesej head of the . employment division of the agency, declared today. . ' y ' . V . '" ; Reese said the new scheBule would raise .. the average WPA workers' wage by $7.03 per month, BY' WEBB MILLfcRy United Press Staff Correspondent U.R)Thft British pahinpf vtof-Germany ' arrives with pro ': J Vy x V ' v ?- I lecchantx ships for security - of " y. ' . v X . forecast: premierXforeign minister, after being held as Spanish, War ran- Buelow- a united stand tonight acainst tween Germany and Poland. ' K They maintained that Hitler's proposals were unacceptable as they stand, and (that any' negotiations negoti-ations cannot be , directly between Poland and Gerniany on the latter lat-ter terms, but - that if there is any conference at. all, Poland must be fully represented with tle;solld support of1 Britain and France,' also al-so in attendance. I Nations Spar Warlly-r y . . y The latter suggestion"-it , was understood, is- asfar as Britain and France went in their refusal to- accept .Hitler's current : terms, brought by air j to London , by Sir jvevmeienderson, British ambassador ambas-sador to Berlin. , . V . - . - Meantime, the' nations x sparred (Warily, each looking" for an open- uig. jaany - conierences were m progress. Hitler talked eteadlly with his most trusted men and held an openy telephone 1 line . to Danzig, keeping, ln touchy with Albert Forster,,the Nazi fuehrer of the Free City. . . Premier Edouard Da)adler con-'r con-'r (Continued ori Page Eight) -V" '-.si ..IX -v ' i -y-.'V'- .l :"X.. . ... ' . flsk-Moufe Stars 0 Ceturn C!ome HOLLYWOOD.Aug 26 UJR) Movie stars travelling in 'Europe, received urgent orders from their studios todayto come home at once. x y .' Producers feared for their saf ety should war break out in Europe.; - They also feared . the stas might be kept abroad and cause thousands "of dollars delay in v already-scheduled pictures. Stars receiving the summons included , Norma Shearer, Tyrone Power and Annabella, Madeleine Carroll, George Raft, Edward G. Robinson, .Gene Autov Gloria Stuart and ' Constance Bennett. Power and Ajmabella, in France --were. ordered to cut short their honeymoon. They booked passage on an! Atlantic clipper flying to America Thursday, Vv xx iV ' x with npnrp nr wnr in-thf along Poland's frontiers which belonged be-longed to Germany before the World wa, ; y x ' Reliable sources said . Hitler do-mandetf', do-mandetf', a free- hand to deal directly di-rectly with -Poland. fv Britain and France firmly c i- poe such a . solution, insisting that, if there Is. any conft-rencc, foland mu3t be fully represent ed, with the , firm backing of Palis and London, also ln attendance.- DesplteV the reported attitude of Ixindon, Nazi circles In Berlin continued 'to express confidence that Britain would counsel Poland to accept Hitler's terms. Information in, London and Parlsy lwas different. Informed sources- said the. two powers were determined to. , stand by . their pledge to protect Poland, even if it meant war. " V 1 - LFrance Sends Reply Jt was announced in Parls-that Robert, Coulondre French am-, bassador .to Berlin, had flown back to theyt3ermari capital to reply. to Hitler's "vague" statements state-ments tC, conversations between Coulondre and. the' fuehrer yesterday yester-day y x,. 1 Coulondre was instructed to restate re-state the French position to Hitler Hit-ler on, the basis of I last niht'a speech by1 Premier Edouard pala-dler, pala-dler, in which he warned there will- be war if Poland is attacked. Coulondre was instructed to recall-to Hitler France's commlt- ments obliging- her to fight If Hitler moves to attack and partition parti-tion Poland. yK Seeks "ApjMjsernnt f According';, to a usually well-In- -formed source, the message which J Henderson r brought from Hitler contained-an assurance of Germany's Ger-many's continued sympathy with Britain. It was statedthe message was, ; designedto encourage the I British "appeasement'x- group. , vnue ine giopmy( ouiiook tor peace continue1d,yihe, British and French professed ' to be satisfied With the general trend of i events and. cited the, following developments: develop-ments: - xv f 1 They hear that Berlin ami Rome are deeply disappointed by the repercussions to the Soviet-German Soviet-German pact Which they hud hoped' would v dumbfound Britain and France and , break uf. the "anti-aggression ' front." 2. Japan reacted yiolently to (Continued on Page Eight , ' HITLER-READY v v - - y' ..-, : ro START 110 y vBERLlN, AugV 2(3 Germany Is prepared and ready 1 tci fiht. high 1 Nazis said tonight, but Aaolf Hitler still btlievcfl ' that Great Britain will urge Poland to capitulate, ' :x. ; v Germany's v terms definitely Include In-clude cession of the free, city f ' ig , and at least.. part of the. Polish corridor ' to the ntkh, hese sources a-saerted at. the. end of a day of -high iensionnd tremendous tre-mendous military activity. One unconfirmed report said thafllit-ler thafllit-ler had actually set the zero hour for a march Into Boland for 8 a. m., today but postponed action ac-tion pending consideration of Vdti message, to Great ' Britain. Xaunt het VP ny BOBEKT nucN I don't pretrnd to ua-deristand ua-deristand politico. All 1 ,know -.'is the country fctajs Republican when Its prr.-perln prr.-perln and goc.t'; Democratic when fclks get mad." y y y |